TL;DR: Twenty-one marsupial terminal taxa representing all the major radiations of marsupials and 10 outgroups, most of which are exceptionally well-preserved fossils such as Vincelestes, Ukhaatherium, and a few basal metatherian taxa, were investigated, resulting in one most parsimonious tree.
TL;DR: Sequenced portions of five nuclear genes were sequenced for representatives of all orders of marsupials, as well as placental outgroups to address questions in higher-level marsupial systematics.
TL;DR: Molecular estimates suggest that the deepest marsupial divergences took place 64–62 million years before present (MYBP), implying that the radiation of recent marsupials took place after the K/T (Cretaceous/Tertiary) boundary.
Abstract: The complete mitochondrial (mt) genomes of five marsupial species have been sequenced. The species represent all three South American orders (Didelphimorphia, Paucituberculata, and Microbiotheria). Phylogenetic analysis of this data set indicates that Didelphimorphia is a basal marsupial lineage followed by Paucituberculata. The South American microbiotherid Dromiciops gliroides (monito del monte) groups with Australian marsupials, suggesting a marsupial colonization of Australia on two occasions or, alternatively, a migration of an Australian marsupial lineage to South America. Molecular estimates suggest that the deepest marsupial divergences took place 64-62 million years before present (MYBP), implying that the radiation of recent marsupials took place after the K/T (Cretaceous/Tertiary) boundary. The South American marsupial lineages are all characterized by a putatively non-functional tRNA for lysine, a potential RNA editing of the tRNA for asparagine, and a rearrangement of tRNA genes at the origin of light strand replication.
TL;DR: The most comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of Paucituberculata to date is presented, finding that taxon sampling and reinterpretations of molar cusp and crest homologies played an important role in the generation of new phylogenetic hypotheses.
TL;DR: The only known species of northern shrew-opossums, Caenolestes, are restricted to the northern Andes of South America as mentioned in this paper, where they are known only from Sangay National Park on the eastern slopes of the Andes in Ecuador.
Abstract: The 4 known species of northern shrew-opossums, Caenolestes (Paucituberculata: Caenolestidae), are restricted to the northern Andes of South America. Five specimens of a new species of Caenolestes were collected in Sangay National Park on the eastern slopes of the Andes in Ecuador. Review of museum specimens revealed 6 additional specimens of this species, here named Caenolestes sangay. All specimens were collected in cloud forest habitats from 2,050 to 3,500 m above sea level along a recently constructed highway. The new species appears to be uncommon. Inadequate sampling on the eastern slopes of the Andes limits our understanding of the distributional limits of the new species, but it occurs in a region of high endemism. New roads and land conversion threaten mature habitats near the type locality. The new species is medium sized with a narrow antorbital vacuity. It is distinguished from congeners by its large major palatine foramen and a diastema between I4 and C, among other characters. A phylogeny of Caenolestidae based on molecular and morphological characters shows a sister-group relationship between Lestoros and Rhyncholestes and indicates that the new species is likely closest to C. caniventer.